DARKFALL By Dean R. Koontz

stripped-down model, without options or luxuries of any kind, just a

get-around car, not a racer-and-chaser. The motor pool mechanics had

even put the snow chains on the tires.

The heap was ready to roll.

He backed out of the parking space, drove up the ramp to the street

exit. He stopped and waited while a city truck, equipped with a big

snowplow and a salt spreader and lots of flashing lights, passed by in

the storm-thrashed darkness.

In addition to the truck, there were only two other vehicles on the

street. The storm virtually had the night to itself. Yet, when the

truck was gone and the way was clear, Jack still hesitated.

He switched on the windshield wipers.

To head toward Rebecca’s apartment, he would have to turn left.

To go to the Jamisons’ place, he ought to turn right.

The wipers flogged back and forth, back and forth, left, right, left,

right.

He was eager to be with Penny and Davey, eager to hug them, to see them

warm and alive and smiling.

Right, left, right.

Of course, they weren’t in any real danger at the moment. Even if

Lavelle was serious when he threatened them, he wouldn’t make his move

this soon, and he wouldn’t know where to find them even if he did want

to make his move.

Left, right, left.

They were perfectly safe with Faye and Keith. Besides, Jack had told

Faye that he probably wouldn’t make it for dinner; she was already

expecting him to be late.

The wipers beat time to his indecision.

Finally he took his foot off the brake, pulled into the street, and

turned left.

He needed to talk to Rebecca about what had happened between them last

night. She had avoided the subject all day. He couldn’t allow her to

continue to dodge it. She would have to face up to the changes that

last night had wrought in both their lives, major changes which he

welcomed wholeheartedly but about which she seemed, at best, ambivalent.

Along the edges of the car roof, wind whistled hollowly through the

metal heading, a cold and mournful sound.

Crouching in deep shadows by the garage exit, the thing watched Jack

Dawson drive away in the unmarked sedan.

Its shining silver eyes did not blink even once.

Then, keeping to the shadows, it crept back into the -deserted, silent

garage.

It hissed. It muttered. It gobbled softly to itself in an eerie, raspy

little voice.

Finding the protection of darkness and shadows wherever it wished to

go-even where there didn’t seem to have been shadows only a moment

before-the thing slunk from car to car, beneath and around them, until

it came to a drain in the garage floor. It descended into the midnight

regions below.

Lavelle was nervous.

Without switching on any lamps, he stalked restlessly through his house,

upstairs and down, back and forth, looking for nothing, simply unable to

keep still, always moving in deep darkness but never bumping into

furniture or doorways, pacing as swiftly and surely as if the rooms were

all brightly lighted. He wasn’t blind in darkness, never the least

disoriented. Indeed, he was at home in shadows. Darkness, after all,

was a part of him.

Usually, in either darkness or light, he was supremely confident and

self-assured. But now, hour by hour, his self-assurance was steadily

crumbling.

His nervousness had bred uneasiness. Uneasiness had given birth to

fear. He was unaccustomed to fear. He didn’t know quite how to handle

it. So the fear made him even more nervous.

He was worried about Jack Dawson. Perhaps it had been a grave mistake

to allow Dawson time to consider his options. A man like the detective

might put that time to good use.

If he senses that I’m even slightly afraid of him, Lavelle thought, and

if he learns more about voodoo, then he might eventually understand why

I’ve got good reason to fear him.

If Dawson discovered the nature of his own special power, and if he

learned to use that power, he would find and stop Lavelle. Dawson was

one of those rare individuals, that one in ten thousand, who could do

battle with even the most masterful Bocor and be reasonably certain of

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